In
this month's issue:
This
month's issue is about the pragmatics of trust: what it is, how
to build it and how to repair it. As I started to put my thoughts
together I realized that what is true about trust in a couple relationship
is also true for organizations and even for individuals alone. I
hope there'll be something of value in it for you. cjc
Contents:
-
The Resident Quotation:
from Martha Graham
- A
Principle of Dynamic Living:
Maximizing Productive Trust
- A
Parting Reminder: from
Florence Hope Luscomb
-
Back Issues:
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The Resident Quotation
The Resident Quotation is repeated with
each issue. It is chosen for its directness and clarity, and for
its ability to combine thought and a basis for action in a way that
is both reassuring and empowering.
The current Resident, from the innovative,
courageous and dynamic dancer and choreographer Martha Graham, exemplifies
the essence and context of living dynamically:
"There is a vitality,
a life force, a quickening that is translated through you into action,
and because there is only one of you in all time, this expression
is unique. And if you block it, it will never exist through any
other medium and be lost. The world will not have it.
"It is not your
business to determine how good it is, nor how valuable it is, nor
how it compares with other expressions. It is your business to keep
it yours clearly and directly, to keep the channel open. You do
not even have to believe in yourself or your work. You have to keep
yourself open and aware directly to the urges that motivate you.
Keep the channel open."
Quoted by biographer Agnes de Mille in "Martha: The Life and
Work of Martha Graham"
A
Principle of Dynamic Living
Propagating
Trust: the Oxygen of Productive Relationships
The
issue of trust is central to human existence. All forms of individual,
collective and organizational co-action depend on it. When we take
a walk through the mall we trust our fellow shoppers not to attack
us. When we make an electronic payment we trust several invisible
organizations to carry out their functions without stealing from
us.
Couples
must trust one another. Corporations must build trust with their
customers. Politicians must create enough trust to be elected. Otherwise
there would be no families, no commerce, and no government. And
just in case that sounds a bit like the promised land, remember
there would be no 'you' either!
Strong
trust promotes growth; betrayed trust kills it. Yet a quality which
is so essential to life is often not deeply considered. I start
with the kind of obvious statement to which we have all drawn exception
at one time or another:
We
are each responsible for maintaining trust.
How
we collaborate in our own betrayal
"If
you trick me once, you make a fool of me,"
goes the old saying, concluding: "If
you trick me twice, I make a fool of myself."
The
notion that we contribute to our own betrayal is a hard one to accept.
"I trusted you!" is a deeply
heartfelt complaint, perhaps more despairing because betrayal starts
early in life and leaves deep and barely healed wounds.
However,
only we can take the responsibility for failing to learn from our
experience. This learning is not necessarily easy to do, because
the dynamics of wishful thinking are complex and rooted in early
learning. Fortunately, it seems to be only in certain parts of our
lives that we allow dreamy unreality to overcome our learned knowledge.
For
example, while we might repeat 'mistakes' in love, once we have
eaten rotten meat and felt the consequences we try very hard to
avoid doing it again. Similarly, while we might repeat 'mistakes'
motivated by greed or addiction, if we break a leg by jumping off
a fifteen foot wall, we are unlikely to have another go.
In
other words, we are learning bio-machines and provided our processes
are free of unconscious limitations, we will naturally improve our
standard of operation. That means we can all learn to be more self-protective
trusters and, perhaps, more trustworthy ourselves as well.
Only
by understanding the dynamics of trust can we assess its likelihood,
build it, maintain it, and restore it when it is broken.
That
understanding begins with a story:
The
bullfrog and the scorpion.
A scorpion
and a bullfrog meet on the bank of a stream and the scorpion asks
the frog to carry him across on its back.
The frog asks: "How do I know you won't
sting me?"
The scorpion says: "Because if I do,
I will die too."
The frog is satisfied, and they set out, but in midstream, the scorpion
stings the frog.
The frog feels the onset of paralysis and starts to sink, knowing
they both will drown, but has just enough time to gasp:
"Why?"
Replies the scorpion: "Because I am a
scorpion . . ."
The
mistake the frog made here was in assuming that the scorpion operated
on the same general assumptions about life as himself. This is precisely
the mistake we make when we go back in the same way, to the same
situation, time and again, despite experiencing repeated betrayals.
One
way to avoid this is to recognize that trust is never absolute,
but is always constrained by a number of factors. The most important
of these is human nature. Just as frogs and scorpions are different
in nature, so no two humans have the same nature. It therefore doesn't
make sense to deal with each of us as if everyone were a simple
clone of ourselves. Just because you might truthfully say: "I
could never do that!", it doesn't mean no-one else could.
However,
once we know an individual's nature we can expect them to behave
in a predictable way. If, therefore, we are dealing with a thief,
we can trust her to steal from us if given the opportunity. If we
are dealing with an irresponsible person, we can trust him to be
disregarding of our needs as well as his own.
We
can also expect them to repeat their behavior unless they submit
themselves to some form of profound behavior change process. Failing
such an investment, if we continue to treat them as if they had
magically changed, we will surely bring betrayal upon ourselves.
We must learn to assess them first.
Assessing
trustworthiness: the environment
Before
we can say: "I trust you"
and mean more than: "I hope I can trust
you", we need some criteria to be able to assess the
trustworthiness of our 'target'. It will nearly always be a subjective
assessment, but should still be more accurate and self-protective
than just guessing.
As
part of that assessment process, we must apply assumptions about
motivation and personal qualities. In a trusted person, we assume
their motivations concerning the rights of others will be ethical,
fair, and non-threatening.
Our
assumptions around personal qualities govern the factors that allow
people to trust and to be trusted. For example, trust requires qualities
such as honesty, integrity, altruism and goodwill. Trustworthiness
requires discretion, reliability, transparency, and predictability.
These
qualities are of such a high order that it is no wonder most of
us appear untrustworthy at one time or another. After all, trust
involves interdependence and therefore vulnerability and risk. Where
we are vulnerable, we are stressed, and under stress we regress
to more primitive ways of behaving. So the act of trusting begets
exactly the dynamics which work against it.
Nevertheless,
trust in its broadest sense is fundamental to successful transactions
of all kinds. Within its protection, we can learn, grow, co-operate
and collaborate. Its absence constrains all these things, perhaps
denying them altogether.
Assessing
trustworthiness: some categories
When
we are buying a newspaper, we don't need to trust that the vendor
would save our lives if we were attacked. We merely require that
he proffer that day's product and the correct change.
Conversely,
if we are marrying someone or entering a business partnership with
them, we want them to meet a rather broader set of trust expectations.
Ironically,
the relationship in which trust is most fundamental to success -
the parent/child relationship - is one in which we have no chance
whatsoever to assess our partners before electing to be born to
them. (Though some believe we do exactly that. However, as no-one
actually remembers the selection process it might as well be universal
'luck' in action.)
So,
before you commit yourself to your next significant relationship,
take a look at some of the forms of trust you might be operating
under depending on the circumstances. Then you'll at least be partly
safe from heading out into the world too bright-eyed, naive and
a hostage to fortune.
Types
of trust include:
- Deterrence-based,
which links the willingness to be trustworthy to a credible threat
of punishment for failure to cooperate. In this type of relationship,
involvement between parties is limited or superficial and usually
compliant. A great many thefts by employees are probably prevented
by this kind of trust.
- Institutional,
which is rooted in confidence in any system's processes intended
to deter opportunistic behavior and promote co-operation. This
is the kind of trust that club members have in each other, though
they may be totally different in their other roles. It also refers
to legal mechanisms, licensing bodies, social networks, and societal
norms. Some of these, it is clear, are more tightly defined -
and thus more 'trustworthy' - than others.
- Knowledge-based,
which relies on the trusted person's reputation and predictability
as demonstrated by certification or references. This is the basis
on which we often trust 'professionals'. The basis for this trust
is frequently a verification carried out by a third-party body,
so we're actually placing more trust in the validating body than
in the person themselves. The extent of trust in this type of
transaction is usually limited to very specific exchanges.
- Conditional,
which is a type of trust in which the parties have stable expectations
of each other within easily identifiable parameters. Their interactions
are thus routine, predictable, and reliable. In a tightly defined
conditional trust relationship, the achievement of common goals
and co-operation is planned so as to involve little personal cost
or self-sacrifice. Such trust occurs when two people meet regularly
to learn a language, go fishing, do each others' nails, or something
of that kind.
- Relationally-based,
which occurs when parties take on the needs and desires of each
other as personal goals and act in ways that consider joint gains.
This form of trust grows as the result of repeated interactions
over time. A history of reliability and dependability gives rise
to positive expectations about each of the parties' future intentions.
This trust, which is often expressed in a clear statement of mutual
goals and roles, is seen in business partnerships and in strong
workplace alliances. It is also reflected in strong coaching relationships.
- Reciprocal,
which is a much broader-based trust where the parties advance
each other's interests out of duty, love, or enlightened self-interest.
In these relationships, advancement of individual interests is
a by-product of devotion to the common good. I regard this as
the healthy and productive core of marital trust.
- Unconditional,
which is characterized by a sense of mutual identification, a
mutually high confidence level, and a mutual belief in shared
values. Ideally, this is backed up by empirical evidence derived
from relevant experience. Unconditional trust is the highly idealized
state of the great partnerships and the stuff of empowering friendships.
However,
it is when we trust unconditionally that we take the biggest risks.
Here, our personal dynamics can obscure the truth of the nature
of the person with whom we're dealing. Denial can be a major feature
of such relationships, with the need for the connection obscuring
the realities of repeated minor betrayals. When a major betrayal
occurs, and denial can no longer be sustained, the pain can be
devastating.
No
matter which type of trust is under examination, it implies:
- an
interaction of values, attitudes, moods and emotions;
-
expectations based on historical, empirical, or anecdotal experiences;
and
-
the nature of the relationship.
With
this number of variables, it's no wonder that trust is such an elusive
quality.
However,
with the wonderful pragmatism of the human being on full display,
we trust anyway. It is embedded in everything we do or try to do.
It is explicit and implicit. It is found in every interpersonal,
inter-organizational, and intra-organizational encounter, at every
meeting. It even exists intrapersonally, within ourselves, as when
we trust ourselves to meet our daily needs.
Given
the extraordinary benefits which derive from high-trust relationships,
it makes sense to see how trust can be built.
Building
trust
The
ideas that follow can once again be applied to all forms of human
organization, from the single organism you call yourself through
all the variants of multiple groupings. They begin with a crucial
observation:
Healthy
trust is rooted in action.
We
can only assess others by what they do, not what they say. Whether
a spouse has promised to be faithful or an organization has promised
to deliver 5 widgets overnight, their trustworthiness can only be
proven by the act (or lack of the act, in the case of the spouse!).
Employees
and prospective employees are often misled by formal vision statements,
mandates, and proud declarations of organizational objectives. Too
often, these are empty symbols of the organizational culture, and
are meaningless unless they are visibly put into action. The same
goes for collegial protestations of all-for-one and one-for-all.
Trust
building requires attention to at least five general principles,
equally applicable to the corporation and the married couple. A
reflective marriage might well include some discussion and 'management'
agreements around them:
- Equal
participation
in any decision-making process. Far too many marital decisions
are made unilaterally. This erodes trust and denies the couple
access to two-minds.
-
Maintenance of autonomy. We are individuals first,
and any attempt to coerce, collude, or co-depend needs to be restrained
if we are to be fully productive. Agreements around personal autonomy
should include guarantees against abuse of power and may require
reinforcement through agreed and even enforceable 'constitutional'
protections. This is especially true where young children are
involved.
-
Candid, respectful feedback. Handled tactfully
and with non-judgmental compassion, feedback delivers enriching
possibilities for critically self-reflective learning and individual
self-development. (Please note: feedback statements such as: "Good
grief! I never heard anything so stupid in my life!"
do not qualify as respectful and do not build trust.)
- Supportive
behavior. This covers behaviors such as helping others
to clarify their ideas and feelings. In some relationships, it
may include a formal agreement that conflict will be ethically
managed, perhaps by making use of a mediator.
-
Open communication. This is my own pet favorite,
because I hold the sublime belief that if we all felt able to
say anything and everything which occurred to us, only the most
valuable expressions would surface above the general cacophony
of nonsense which makes up most of our daily communications. Certainly,
when I feel safe to express my own 'nonsense' without fear of
condemnation, I trust my surroundings and don't mind even if no-one
agrees with me.
On
this matter of uttering one's convictions, it's worth noting that
while some national constitutions guarantee freedom of speech, and
others imply it, there is one place where hardly anyone feels able
to express themselves openly and directly: at home. Attitudes, opinions,
and even scientific truths are often constrained by family mythologies.
This is one reason why 'home' is such a hard place to develop trust.
Practically
all children know that a closed and secretive parental decision-making
process directly contributes to declining trust. Family dialogues
that emphasize winning and losing, and a family ethos which activates
negative traits such as lying, pandering, and competitive favoritism
promote great mistrust and cynicism. The more gaps there are between
expectations and the family's perceived ability to deliver, the
more trust erodes.
On
the other hand, there is a strong relationship between levels of
trust and openness. When people and organizations trust that they
are free from reprisal, they reveal what they know and readily search
for further information they need.
Openness
produces trust and trust encourages people and organizations to
use candor. When being open is not punished and/or confidences are
not violated, we are motivated to sustain our openness or be even
more frank. The cycle deepens and duplicates itself because positive
trust relations are self-heightening. In this rich mulch, innovation
and growth is inevitable.
Building
trust must start with leadership
Those
determined to create an environment of trust must realize that trust
cannot be commanded or manipulated into existence. Trust is an attitude
that is voluntarily granted to others only after assessing whether
the recipients are worthy of such consideration. It is built or
earned rather than dictated or orchestrated.
Leadership
is a crucial factor in building conditions of faith and confidence
in any couple, group or other organization. In a couple, leadership
changes depending on the real or virtual situation. The 'trust leader'
in any form of group must model the behavior they expect from others
by keeping their word, sheltering the weaker, and speaking truth
to power.
How
values affect trust
Stated
and lived values such as honesty and transparency are a great contributor
to trust. They promote a high degree of mutual confidence and serve
to create a tendency to trust that extends beyond the current situation.
When
values are shared among people or organizations, the result is co-operation
and even collaboration. Shared values help diminish judgments of
inadequacy and provide assurances that knowledge and information
will be used for the greater good. They also increase the likelihood
that others will act in good faith and be guided by the shared standards.
Conversely,
when shared values are absent or when trustee and trustor are unsure
of each other's values, free exchange of knowledge and information
is unlikely. This is partly because there is an unacceptable risk
in not knowing how such information might be used. We do not reveal
our vulnerabilities to those we fear might exploit them.
This
defensive rigidity softens and even disappears once an atmosphere
of trust is established. Then, partners are likely to optimize their
positions and move quickly to agreement. As a benefit of this, high
levels of trust between individuals or organizations generally ensure
fairer results, reduce the pain of resolving differences, and enhance
the durability of any agreement.
Erosion
of trust
A review
of trust is not complete without an examination of how trust disappears.
There are three contributory factors in this process:
- When
values, attitudes, moods, and emotions do not favor trust, trust
will not develop;
-
When expectations are not reciprocated and emotional responses
are negative, trust spirals downwards;
-
When trust is subject to any violations of mutually agreed upon
expectations, trust is reduced and even lost forever.
There
are also some paradoxical ways in which trust is lost, perhaps best
summed up by Milton's Eve responding to the Serpent's gushing praise
of the Apple in 'Paradise Lost'. "Thy
overweening praise", she says, "leaves
in some doubt the virtue of this fruit."
So
it is when presidents and prime ministers assure us that they are
putting their integrity on the line. So it is when professional
organizations tell us they are adding rules, regulations, and formal
mechanisms of control over their membership. All these assertions
are delivered with the goal of promoting trust.
Sadly,
the more powerful the assertion, the stronger the implication is
left that our leaders, or the institutions and their members, cannot
be trusted. If we need to claim trustworthiness, we are not demonstrating
it. After all, how does: "Trust me; I’m
a serpent." sound to you?
Characteristics
of a low-trust relationship
When
trust levels are low, or when trust is perceived to have been broken,
interpersonal or inter-organizational transactions suffer and counter-productive
results inevitably follow. When we perceive an environment as untrustworthy,
we will act defensively to protect ourselves from harm.
Organizations
- be they families or businesses - which are suffering under a low
trust ethos are typically characterized by conditions of high stress.
Most noticeably, all members spend a great deal of time and effort
looking over their shoulders, justifying past decisions, and seeking
out scapegoats when something goes wrong. Husbands install recording
devices to check on wives; junior staff are encouraged to snoop
on their immediate bosses.
Just
like children in fear-driven families, individuals in low-trust
organizations are pushed to operate with incomplete information.
Their suggestions are often treated with suspicion. Fear of reprisal
or ridicule inhibits them from contemplating new approaches to problem
solving and of performing to their peak.
It
is clear that the family of origin plays a crucial role in enabling
us to trust. A successful growth environment for trust must be built
on a foundation that includes not only the different types of trust
but different levels of trust as well. Specifically:
- Lateral
trust must exist among peers such as 'parents' or 'children';
-
Vertical trust must exist between a supervisor
and subordinates, or parent and child;
-
External trust must exist between the organization
and the outside world. This trust in particular is often missing
in the family situation, where 'our' family is held to be somehow
different and superior to 'the rest'. Separatist phrases such
as 'we don't do that in our family' echo down the generations.
Family myths can be incredibly destructive in adult life.
The
effects of an absence of trust within these vertical and horizontal
connections can be devastating. It can result in false, adversarial,
and even dysfunctional behavior as the various individuals seek
to protect their particular roles and narrow self-interest.
On
the other hand, strong trust relationships on all levels produce
a more informal, collaborative and constructive approach to life.
In tree terms, it's the difference between a poisoned root system
and a coherent, healthy one.
Repairing
trust
Sooner
or later, in any relationship, we find our expectations shattered,
our trust threatened.
What
do we do?
It's
not down to us alone. Injured or broken trust cannot be re-established
between parties until each willingly renegotiates the relationship.
Repairing
trust begins with a four-step process:
- The
trust violation must be stated, recognized and acknowledged;
-
The cause of the violation must be identified and explored. Issues
raised here may be recorded for future examination;
-
The violation must be acknowledged as having been destructive,
even if this is only in the context of this relationship;
-
Responsibility for the violation must be accepted by both parties.
This is not always a popular idea, but it is a fact that when
a violation of trust occurs it does so in the context of a relationship
of at least two people. Any
violation might be as much a matter of interpretation as of action.
Or, where action has taken place, it might be in response to something
originating in the other - now 'violated' - person. The only exception
is where there is a true imbalance of power, such as where children
are concerned.
To
try to put this in perspective, a normally faithful and good husband
might suddenly go adrift in some way. Ideally, (1) he will describe
his actions and acknowledge their threat to trust in the relationship.
However, he did not act in a vacuum. His 'betrayal' took place under
certain circumstances (2) which both need to examine. He (3) has
to accept that his actions were purposively destructive rather than
creative. Finally, (4) both must accept the truth that the action
arose from their joint process and set about repairing it together.
This
process is harder to see taking place between corporations, yet
as examples of corporate 'betrayal' are examined, the collusive
element within their 'cheated' partners’ behaviors become
evident. The phenomenon of Enron could not have occurred without
the active cooperation of greedy or infatuated allies. More simply,
small companies often overlook the most elementary caution when
the opportunity of selling to a vast corporation arises.
For
individuals or corporations, however, when all the admissions and
confessions have taken place - thus creating a more open environment
- the repair process may begin.
Even
though in reality there is no perpetrator and no victim, each participant
must go through with the role they have been cast in. The repair
process is a ritual, requiring the ‘victim’ to request
and for the ‘violator’ to offer some form of forgiveness
or action designed to undo the violation and rebuild the trust.
By
apologizing, the ‘violator’ offers to engage in actions
that will do more than restore any previously held balance of rights
and obligations. The ‘violator’ is volunteering to change
themselves and thus the dynamics of the relationship so that trust
can be rebuilt. This also gives the ‘victim’ the power
to assert any new terms and conditions under which that will occur.
Co-dependent collusion is thus brought to an end.
As
this shows, it is very important to go beyond mere apology because
that alone will change nothing.
Ultimately,
if we feel we have been betrayed in the past, we have to be able
to say to our partners, openly and without judgment: "I
don't feel easily able to trust you in this because you let me down
before. Can you show me what you have done to bring about a different
result this time?"
We
must then assess whether any action has been taken to bring about
change, and whether it seems enough to make a preferred result more
likely.
Conclusion
We
have to trust, but not blindly. Even our first encounters with individuals
and organizations can be less risky if we allow ourselves to be
healthily wary.
Trust
is essential as a foundation for co-operation and as the basis for
stability in social institutions of all kinds. It is also the one
ingredient that can inject your relationships with liveliness, dynamism
and growth.
I hope
the trust in your lives helps them be more fruitful.
Christopher
J Coulson
A Parting Reminder
"There
is no end to what you can accomplish if you don't care who gets
the credit."
-
Florence Hope Luscomb, twentieth century activist and early campaigner
for women's suffrage.
Explore the Archive
It's
now possible to take a look through the back issues of Dynamic Living.
Just visit: http://www.santafecoach.com/dl/dlintro.htm.
Copyright
©2004 by Christopher J. Coulson. All rights reserved.
Contact
Christopher at:
4, Eaton Manor, The Drive, Hove, East Sussex BN3 3PT, UK
Telephone:
01273 749636; or toll-free from the USA:1-866-761-1392.
Christopher
J. Coulson
www.santafecoach.com
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